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People v. Belden

Supreme Court of California
Jan 1, 1869
37 Cal. 51 (Cal. 1869)

Opinion

         Appeal from the County Court of Santa Clara County.

         The larceny of which the defendant was convicted was charged to have been committed on the night of March 18th, 1868. The defendant appealed.

         COUNSEL:

         D. W. Herrington, for Appellant.

         Jo Hamilton, Attorney General, for the People.


         JUDGES: Rhodes, J.

         OPINION

          RHODES, Judge

         The defendant was indicted for grand larceny. McComb, the owner of the horses alleged to have been stolen by the defendant, in describing the nature of defendant's employment, testified as follows: " I had him hired by the month to drive a team, hauling wood and other articles, and doing general work about the livery stable--cleaning off the horses and clearing out the stable--and when I was not there, he had charge of the stable. We both had charge of the horses in the stable, and I told the defendant to let the horses to persons applying for them, when I was not there. The defendant usually slept in the stable. I left him in the stable on the evening of the 18th day of March last."

         The defendant's position is, that under such circumstances he could not be convicted of larceny of the horses in the livery stable, though he might be liable for embezzlement under section seventy, or for a felonious conversion as bailee under section seventy-one of the Act concerning crimes and punishments. The evidence does not bring the case within section seventy-one, as there is nothing in the case tending to show that the defendant was a bailee of the property. Embezzlement is defined as " the fraudulently removing and secreting of personal property with which the party has been intrusted, for the purpose of applying it to his own use." (Bouv. Law Dict.) The leading distinction between larceny as defined in section sixty, and the offense defined in section seventy, which is in effect embezzlement, consists in the fact, that in the first place the guilty party has, and in the latter case he has not, the possession of the property at the time of the commission of the offense. (See Wharton Am. Crim. Law, Notes to Sec. 1,907, and following.) The seventieth section was not designed to comprehend all cases in which servants, clerks, etc., should steal the personal property of their masters, employers, etc., for the larger part of such cases was provided for by the sections concerning larceny; but only those in which the property was intrusted to them by or for their masters, employers, etc. The party intrusted with property has it in his custody--his possession. The question, therefore, upon the solution of which this appeal depends is, in whose possession were the horses while in the livery stable of McComb?

         To this question the evidence does not give a doubtful or equivocal answer. It was not a case of joint or mixed possession of McComb and the defendant. McComb had the possession of the horses while he was at the stable, and it cannot, upon any theory consistent with reason, be said that the possession changed whenever he was absent from the stable for an hour or a day. The defendant occupied only the relation of servant to McComb, and although he had labor and duties to perform in respect to the horses, he was not intrusted with them, in the sense of the statute.

         Judgment affirmed and remittitur directed to issue forthwith.


Summaries of

People v. Belden

Supreme Court of California
Jan 1, 1869
37 Cal. 51 (Cal. 1869)
Case details for

People v. Belden

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA v. JOHN BELDEN

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Jan 1, 1869

Citations

37 Cal. 51 (Cal. 1869)

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